Simon Tatham 4a9db8a002 Now _this_ is what Undo ought to be doing in a Minesweeper clone.
Rather than revealing the entire mine layout when you die, we now
only reveal the one mine that killed you. You can then Undo and
continue playing, without having spoiled the rest of the grid for
yourself. The number of times you've died is counted in the status
line (and is not reduced by Undo :-).

Amusingly, I think this in itself is quite a good way of dealing
with ambiguous sections in a Minesweeper grid: they no longer
_completely_ spoil your enjoyment of the game, because you can still
play the remainder of the grid even if you haven't got a completely
clean sweep. Just my luck that I should invent the idea when I've
already arranged for ambiguous sections to be absent :-)

[originally from svn r5886]
2005-05-31 18:24:39 +00:00
2005-05-31 08:56:33 +00:00

This is the README accompanying the source code to Simon Tatham's
puzzle collection. The collection's web site is at
<http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/puzzles/>.

You should find several Makefiles in the source code:

 - `Makefile' should work under GNU make on Linux, provided you have
   GTK installed to compile and link against. It builds GTK binaries
   of the puzzle games.

 - `Makefile.vc' should work under MS Visual C++ on Windows.

 - `Makefile.cyg' should work under Cygwin / MinGW. With appropriate
   tweaks and setting of TOOLPATH, it should work for both compiling
   on Windows and cross-compiling on Unix.

 - `Makefile.osx' should work under Mac OS X, provided the Xcode
   tools are installed. It builds a single monolithic OS X
   application capable of running any of the puzzles, or even more
   than one of them at a time.

Many of these Makefiles build a program called `nullgame' in
addition to the actual game binaries. This program doesn't do
anything; it's just a template for people to start from when adding
a new game to the collection, and it's compiled every time to ensure
that it _does_ compile and link successfully (because otherwise it
wouldn't be much use as a template). Once it's built, you can run it
if you really want to (but it's very boring), and then you should
ignore it.

DO NOT EDIT THE MAKEFILES DIRECTLY, if you plan to send any changes
back to the maintainer. The makefiles are generated automatically by
the Perl script `mkfiles.pl' from the file `Recipe'. If you need to
change the makefiles as part of a patch, you should change Recipe
and/or mkfiles.pl.

The manual is provided in Windows Help format for the Windows build;
in text format for anyone who needs it; and in HTML for the Mac OS X
application and for the web site. It is generated from a Halibut
source file (puzzles.but), which is the preferred form for
modification. To generate the manual in other formats, rebuild it,
or learn about Halibut, visit the Halibut website at
<http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/halibut/>.
Description
No description provided
Readme 26 MiB
Languages
C 93.3%
JavaScript 1.4%
Objective-C 1.1%
CMake 1.1%
HTML 0.8%
Other 2.2%